China repeats pledge to stop using prisoners' organs

Official says use of executed prisoners' organs in transplant operations will cease by Jan. 1

Asia-Pacific

05 Aralık 2014 Cuma 00:07

World Bulletin/News Desk

China is to stop the practice of harvesting organs from executed prisoners, state media reported Thursday.

Huang Jiefu, a former deputy health minister who leads China’s organ donation and transplant service, told a seminar that transplant organs would only be supplied from volunteers from Jan. 1, state-run China Radio International said.

In China, around two in three transplanted organs come from corpses with executed prisoners accounting for more than 90 percent of these, Huang previously stated.

Local media has reported that 38 major medical institutions in Guangdong, Beijing and Zhejiang have stopped using organs from executed prisoners.

China has relied on the use of executed prisoners’ organs due to a lack of voluntary donations for cultural reasons. It has been criticized for taking prisoners’ organs without consent.

The communist regime puts more people to death a year than the rest of the world combined, with 2,400 estimated executions in 2013, according to Dui Hua, a prisoners’ rights group.

Huang made the remarks during an organ procurement seminar in Kunming, southwest China, on Wednesday, China Radio International reported, citing the Southern Metropolitan Daily.

The newspaper said China had a donation rate of 0.6 per 1 million people, compared to 37 per 1 million in Spain.

"It can't be denied that at present, apart from the traditional thinking that keeps enthusiasm for organ donation low, people also have concerns as to whether organ donation can be fair, just and transparent," Huang was quoted as saying.

According to Huang, around 300,000 patients need organ transplants annually but only 10,000 operations are performed.

Illegal trade in organs on the black market and even in licensed hospitals has plagued Chinese healthcare.